A medical surgical nurse is asked to float to a women's health unit to care for clients who are scheduled for therapeutic abortions.
The nurse refuses to accept this assignment and expresses her personal beliefs as being incongruent with this medical practice. The nursing supervisor states that the unit is short-staffed and that they could really use her expertise because it just involves taking care of clients who have undergone a surgical procedure. In consideration of legal and ethical practices, can the nursing supervisor enforce this assignment?
a. The staff nurse has the responsibility of accepting any assignment that is made while working for a health care unit, so the nursing supervisor is within his or her rights to enforce this assignment.
b. Because the unit is short-staffed, the staff nurse should accept the assignment to provide care by benefit of her or his experience to clients who need care.
c. The staff nurse has expressed a legitimate concern based on his or her feelings; the nursing supervisor does not have the authority to enforce this assignment.
d. The nursing supervisor should emphasize that this assignment requires care of a surgical client for which the staff nurse is adequately trained and should therefore enforce the assignment.
Question 2
Which client will most likely seek prenatal care?
a. Janice, 15 years old, tells her friends, I don't believe I am pregnant.
b. Carol, 28 years old, is in her second pregnancy and abuses drugs and alcohol.
c. Margaret, 20 years old, is in her first pregnancy and has access to a free prenatal clinic.
d. Glenda, 30 years old, is in her fifth pregnancy and delivered her last infant at home with the help of her mother and sister.